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Descending cut
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An examination of the Knightly Art of Fighting by Andre Paurnfeindt, Freifechter of Vienna, Austria, towards a clear comprehension and concise understanding thereof.
Wrathcut
 
Wrathpoint
 
The Warcut
 
The Four openings
 
Crooked cut
 
crosswise cut
 
Ox and plow
 
Cockeyed cut
 
part cut
 
The Four positions
 
The Four parries
 
The Pursuing
 
Overrunning
 
Displacing
 
Cutting off
 
Two Hangers
 
The Speaking window
 
The Crown
 
  
The plays of the sword by Johannes Liechtenauer.
+
To the Sublime Magnificent Prince and Lord, Sir Matthäus of the Holy Roman See, Cardinal of St. Angelo, Papal Legate, Bishop of Gurk, Coadjuctor of the Diocese of Salzburg etc; Andre Paurnfeindt, Freifechter and his Magnificence the Cardinal's loyal bodyguard, offers his humble service.
  
The seven master cuts
+
O' Sublime in God the Father, Magnificent Prince and Merciful Lord; after a great deterioration and lack of attention became apparent to me, for this reason, in the name of impressionable youth amid daily practice, I have decided to concisely record the Knightly Art of Fighting and thoroughly explain the Zettel in order to avoid gambling, debauchery, bad company, etc. Such an explanation I wish to accredit and dedicate to your Princely Grace. With this, I prostrate myself before your Magnificence in all humility.
  
The Wrathcut
+
In short, I have formulated three chapters in which the Lore and Essence of Fighting is concisely summarized, not for the elder fencers, but for the young students, so that enjoyment and practice grows daily in them. From all of this I have briefly proposed twelve rules from which expertise, subtlety and agility can develop in you. In this way, you learn from a master of the sword or from a sworn Freifechter and not from misbegotten fencers, like when one blind man leads the other and both fall into a ditch.
The Crooked cut
 
The Half cut
 
The Crosswise cut
 
The Crosswise switch cut
 
The part cut
 
The Crown cut
 
  
This is the text about the three winds, that is, a cut, a thrust, a slice, a sweep and it is also the text and expository gloss of the long recital of the the longsword of Liechtenauer's art.
+
If leaf and grass grew
 +
As fast as envy and hate
 +
Then sheep and cattle would have
 +
A good winter this year.
  
Here it begins, the recital of the knightly art of fencing is written herein, which Johannes Liechtenauer, God be merciful to him, who is known to be a high master of the art, had created as lies written hereafter. The first with the long sword, thereafter with the spear on horseback and also with the short sword in battle and it begins in this way...
+
Do not let yourself scoff at these twelve rules,
 +
From them great art may sprout from you.
  
Young knight learn
+
The First
To have love for god, honor women and maidens
 
So that you expand your praise and honor.
 
Practice Knighthood and learn
 
Art that decorates you
 
And in war exalts you with honor.
 
Use the good grips of wrestling,
 
Lance, spear, sword, and messer
 
Like a man
 
And render them useless in other's hands.
 
Attack suddenly and storm in,
 
Keep rolling, engage or let pass.
 
Thus the intellectuals hate him,
 
Yet this one sees glories.
 
Hold yourself to this:
 
All art has a time and place.
 
  
If you wish to examine the art,
+
Whichever leg<ref>lit: foot</ref> stands forward, bend it.
Go left and right with cutting
+
The hind one supports the body above outstretched.
And left with right,
 
That is, if you desire to fence strongly.
 
  
Gloss: Note this is the foremost art of the long sword, that above all you should learn to cut correctly. That is, if you wish to otherwise fence strongly and understand it like this. When you stand with the left foot forwards and cut from your right side, if you then do not support the cut with the ingress of your right foot, then this cut is spurious and incorrect. When your right side remains behind, the cut becomes too short thereby and its correct path down to the other side in front of the left foot cannot happen.
+
The Second
  
Or if you stand with the right foot forwards and cut from the left side, if you do not then also support<ref>Vienna: cleave closely behind</ref>the cut with your left foot, then the cut is again spurious<ref>Vienna: completely wrong</ref>. Therefore, see to it that when you cut from the right side that you always support the cut with the right foot. Do the same when you cut from the left side so that your body brings itself correctly into balance with it. In this way, the cuts will be hewn correctly.
+
Fence upright with a straight body.
 +
Drive a powerful posture from that length.
  
This is the text of another lesson
+
The Third
  
Whoever chases after cuts
+
Strike and step with one another.
Allows themselves to enjoy little of the art.
+
But set your feet against one another.
  
Gloss. This is: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, you do not stand still and look upon their cut nor await whatever they fence against you. Know that all fencers that look out and wait upon another's cut and will do nothing other than parry, they allow themselves to enjoy quite little of the art, because it is for naught and they become struck for this reason. Therefore, strike and seek the openings.
+
The Fourth
  
Text. Another lesson
+
Those who chase after cuts
 +
Are not allowed to enjoy art.
  
Cut from close proximity whatever you wish
+
The Fifth
No changer gets past your shield
 
To the head, to the body
 
Do not omit the stingers
 
With the entire body
 
Fence whatever you desire to conduct with strength.
 
  
Understand that like this. When you arrive at the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then whatever you wish to fence, do that with the entire strength of your body and with that cut in, to either their head or to their body from close proximity and remain with your point in front of their face, so they cannot disengage ((with before)) the point. Then if they parry with strength and allow their point to go up in the air or to one side and remains low with their hands, then give them a flesh wound on their arm or rise up high with your sword when they parry and strike below to their body with a free cut and with that, immediately step back before they come to their senses. Thus, they are struck.
+
Note what the flat is.
 +
Do not fence left if you are right.
  
Gloss: When you arrive at the opponent, then whatever you wish to fence, drive that with your entire strength. Strike them to the head and to the body from close proximity and remain with your point in front of their face or breast, so that they cannot disengage in front of your point. And then if they bind strongly against your sword and rise up high with their sword, then strike below to their body or give them a flesh wound upon their arm before they come to their senses and immediately spring back from that.
+
The Sixth
  
Now hear what is bad
+
Seek weak and strong
Do not fence lefty from above if you are a righty
+
Indes, note this word precisely.
And if you are a lefty
 
You also quite awkward on the right
 
  
Gloss: Note this is a lesson that hits upon two people, a righty and a lefty and it is also how you shall cut so that one cannot win the weak of your sword with the first cut. Look at it like this. When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if you are a righty, then do not cut the first cut from the left side by choice because it is weak and with it you cannot hold fast when they cut in with you strongly. Therefore, cut from the right so you can stay in contact with full strength and work whatever you wish at the sword.
+
The Seventh
  
In the same way if you are lefty, then also do not cut the first cut from the right side because it is quite undependable art for a lefty to drive from the right side. It is also the same for a righty from the left side.
+
Recognize soft or hard.
 +
Pursuing is your companion. <ref>alt: vehicle, path, application</ref>
  
Text
+
The Eighth
  
Before and After, the two things
+
Strike before and after.
Are the singular origin of the entire art.
+
Do not be hasty to rush in.
Weak and strong
 
Indes, note them with this word
 
So that you may learn
 
To work and ward with art.
 
Whoever frightens easily
 
Never learns to fence.
 
  
Gloss: Note this is about how you shall understand and get the sense of the two things correctly for all situations. This is the before and the after and after that, the weak and the strong of the sword and the word Indes, because the entire art of fencing comes from those. When you have correctly taken in and comprehend these things and have not forgotten the word Indes therein in all plays that you conduct, then you are indeed a good fencer and master of the sword and can fully teach princes and lords so that they may keep with the proper art of the sword in play and in earnest.
+
The Ninth
  
Here note what is here called the before.
+
Fence at the body from close.
 +
Do not omit the stingers.<ref>alt: flesh wounds, tag hits.</ref>
  
This is when you precede the opponent with a cut or what have you so that they must parry you, then Indes work swiftly using your sword in front of yourself within the parry or whatever with other plays<ref>Vienna: threats</ref> so that they cannot come to any work.
+
The Tenth
  
Note what is called the after.
+
Step close in the bind.
 +
Otherwise you will be wounded.
  
This is when the opponent precedes you with a cut so that you must parry them, then Indes work swiftly to the nearest opening with your act of parrying using your sword so that you seize their before the after and this is called before and after.
+
The Eleventh
  
Now you should also know about the weak and the strong of the sword.
+
[That which is] in front of the hand is called the long edge.
 +
Seldom guide an act of parrying to the short.
  
Get the sense of it like this.  From the hilt to the midpoint of the blade, this is the strong of the sword and further past the midpoint to the point of the sword is the weak. And how you shall work with the strong of your sword according to the weak of their sword will be introduced to you and clarified hereafter.<ref>Augsburg II: You will learn about this hereafter</ref>
+
The Twelfth
  
Now hear the text of the five cuts
+
If you frighten easily,
 +
Do not learn to fence.
  
Learn five cuts
+
The first chapter teaches
From the right hand, whoever invests in these,
+
how one should employ expertise in the long sword, whichever is used with both hands, such as the battle sword, riding sword, estoc, and many others which I will for brevity's sake leave out.
We swear to them
 
To gladly pay them back in skills.
 
  
Gloss: Note there are five concealed cuts that many masters of the sword know nothing of which to speak of. You shall learn to execute these from the right side. Whichever fencer that can break the cuts with the proper art without harm, they will be valued by other masters, for their art shall be more worthwhile to them than other fencers. And how one shall execute these cuts with their plays will be explained to you hereafter.
+
A Zettel fencer I proclaim myself,
 +
Indomitable in Sword and Messer.
 +
In strength, weakness, short and long,
 +
I do violence to my opponent.
 +
Indes, pay attention! Understand me correctly.
 +
Hit them before they strike their position
  
This is the text about the components of the recital
+
Then I have another one on top of that.
 +
With this, my art sells quite expensively.
 +
Now I conduct my work unhindered,
 +
Right in smoothly to the body, toward the blade
 +
To make slice, strike, thrust; then right back out.
 +
If you wish to learn thoroughly, come to me.
  
Wrathcut Crook and Cross,
+
The first resting place is named High Point or Ox as the elders will and it will be assumed hereon.
If the Eye Cocker keeps with the Parter,
 
The Fool parries.
 
Pursuing, Overrunning, places the attack
 
Disengage, Suddenly withdraw,
 
Rush through, cut off, press the hands
 
Tilt and Turn to uncover with
 
Slash, catch, sweep, thrust to clash with
 
 
 
These are the correct chief components of the recital of the long sword have been named for you as they are each designated with its name so that you can better understand them and the whole of it is 17 side by side.
 
 
 
Gloss: Note here the correct chief components of the recital of the long sword have been named and is seventeen side by side.
 
 
 
This first are the five concealed cuts as they are designated each in particular
 
 
 
Item The first the wrathcut
 
crooked cut
 
crosswise cut
 
cockeyed cut
 
part cut
 
 
 
Item note the plays
 
 
 
Of these: The four guards
 
The four parries
 
The pursuing
 
The overruning
 
The displacing
 
The disengaging
 
The yanking back
 
The slipping through
 
The cutting off
 
The hand pressing
 
The hangings
 
The windings
 
 
 
And what you should fence from the components and how you should give yourself openings with the hangings and the windings, those will be clarified. <ref> Augsburg II: You will find those one after the other hereafter</ref>
 
 
 
The wrathcut with it's plays
 
  
 
Whoever makes a descending cut at you
 
Whoever makes a descending cut at you
Line 170: Line 98:
 
If they become aware of it
 
If they become aware of it
 
Then abscond above without concern
 
Then abscond above without concern
 
Note the wrathcut breaks any straying cut<ref>Augsburg II: descending cut</ref> and is just nothing more than a straight peasant blow. Execute it like this. When the opponent cuts from your<ref>sic. The next line reads: "then you cut from above from your right side as well" It is from their right side. The Augsber II conserves this mistake</ref> right side from above to your head<ref>Augsburg II: when the opponent strikes for your head from your right side from above</ref>, then you cut from above from your right side as well, without any act of parrying, wrathfully with them, in over atop their sword and let your point shoot in forwards and long into their face or breast. If they become aware of your point and parry with strength, then rise up with your sword against their sword's blade, up off away from their sword and cut back in against their sword's blade to their head on their other side. This is called absconding above.
 
 
The second play of the wrathcut text
 
 
 
Be strong in turn
 
Be strong in turn
 
Wind. Stab. If they see it, then take it below
 
Wind. Stab. If they see it, then take it below
 
Note this is how you shall work with your point form the wrathcut and understand it like this. When you cut in wrathfully with the opponent. Then if they weather this with strength and you do not wish to abscond above, be strong back against their sword, and rise up with your arms and wind against their sword and thrust in from above at their face. If they become aware of the thrust and rise up and parry, stay like this in the winding and keep your hilt in front of your face and lodge against your point upon them below.
 
 
One more play from the wrathcut text
 
 
 
Precisely note this.
 
Precisely note this.
 
Cut, thrust, position, soft or hard
 
Cut, thrust, position, soft or hard
 
Indes and before and after
 
Indes and before and after
 
Without collision your war is not to be hasty
 
Without collision your war is not to be hasty
 
This is a lesson when they bind onto your sword with a cut or with a thrust or however else. You should not let yourself be too hasty with the war, that is with the windings. You then precisely note whether it is soft or hard when one sword clashes against another. And as soon as you sense this, then wind Indes and work continually to the nearest opening with the war, according to the soft and according to the hard. And this is called the before and the after which you have learned of before.
 
 
The text of the war
 
 
 
Whoever hunts the war
 
Whoever hunts the war
 
Above, will be exposed below.
 
Above, will be exposed below.
 
Note the windings and the work from them with the point to the four openings is called the war. Conduct it like this: When you cut in with the wrathcut, as soon as then they parry, rise up with your arms and twist in your point into the upper opening of their left side high against their sword. Then if they parry<ref>Augsburg II: displace. (Matches the Lew)</ref> the thrust from above, then remain standing like this during the winding and let your point sink down back to their left side. If they then chase your sword with an act of parrying, then seek the lower opening of their right side with your point. If they then chase your sword further with an act of parrying, then rise up with your sword to your right side. In this way they will be exposed above and below, if you conduct it correctly.
 
 
This is the text
 
 
 
In all windings
 
In all windings
 
Cut, thrust, slice learn to apply
 
Cut, thrust, slice learn to apply
 
Also with that you shall
 
Also with that you shall
Inspect cut, thrust or slice
+
Gauge cut, thrust or slice
 
In all encounters
 
In all encounters
Of the masters, if you wish to dishonor them.
+
Of the masters, if you wish to weaken them.
  
Know that you should be quite polished with all windings on the sword, because each one of the windings has three particular plays, that is, a cut, a thrust and a slice; and when you wind on the sword, you shall quite precisely inspect and note so that you do not conduct the incorrect play that is called for in the winding. Expressly that you do not cut when you should thrust and not slice when you should cut and not and also not thrust when you should slice. And furthermore you should always wind the correct plays that are by rights appropriate to conduct in all engagements and windings on of the sword if you otherwise wish to dishonor and confound the masters that set themselves against you. And the number of windings on the sword and how you shall conduct them, you shall find them in the last chapter of the recital which says, "Who hangs well and delivers windings with it..."
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The wing cut
 +
Undertake the wing cut from the upper guard or high point. The first strike to the left ear from the roof, the second from below with a step to your left side, the third strike to the head from behind.
 +
 
 +
Break
 +
If the opponent initiates a wing cut, parry the first from the roof. The second, pin down with the long edge from below and grab their sword's pommel with your left hand, then you throw them over their sword.
 +
 
 +
Wrathcut Crook and Cross,
 +
If the Eye Cocker keeps with the Parter,
 +
The Fool parries.
 +
Pursuing, Overrunning, places the attack
 +
Disengage, Suddenly withdraw,
 +
Rush through, cut off, press the hands
 +
Tilt and Turn to uncover with
 +
Slash, catch, sweep, thrust to clash with
  
The text of the four openings
+
Crown cut
 +
Step and strike through to the opponent's ear from above with the long edge. The second step and strike down from above to the right ear with the short edge. The third, strike from behind with the long edge.
  
Know the four openings
+
Break
Hunt so that you strike quite wisely
+
When the opponent executes a crown cut, catch the first. For the second, situate your short edge against their neck so that they injure themselves themself.
Without any fear
 
Without doubt however they are situated.
 
  
You shall know the four openings on a person. The first opening is the right side and the second the left above the girdle of the man. the other two, they are also the right and the left sides below the girdle, if you wish to strike or cut<ref>Augsburg II omits: or cut</ref> it surely. When you come upon the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then select one of those openings at that moment and initiate a cut skillfully to that opening and not to the sword and do not pay attention to whatever they against you. Then if they parry your cut, then immediately work in the act of parrying with the point or otherwise high to the nearest opening. And always watch like this for the openings of the body and of the sword<ref>Augsburg II: not of the sword. (Matches the Lew)</ref> with all cuts and thrusts<ref>Vienna omits: with all cuts and thrusts</ref>
+
Failer
 +
Undertake the failer from the high point. Cut short to the opponent's left ear explosively and step towards their right side with your left foot. And hammer in the second strike long to the right ear. Keep high with good
  
And how you shall hunt the four openings and fence into them will be explained to you hereafter in the play that says there: "Lodge against four regions, remain thereupon to learn winding"<ref>The verse matching this is slightly different further down: "Learn to remain upon them if you wish to finish", but this phrasing does somewhat exist in the version of the zettel without the gloss in the Vienna, p105r. https://wiktenauer.com/wiki/Page:MS_KK5126_105r.jpg</ref>.
+
Break
 +
Cut from above from the ox against the opponent, down through the roses and land your short edge in their face. Veer off short and make a followup strike with the long edge.
  
The text of the breaking of the four openings
+
About the 4 openings
 +
Know the four openings
 +
Take aim so that you strike quite wisely
 +
Without any fear
 +
Without doubt however they are situated
  
If you wish estimate how
+
Breaking the four openings
 +
If you wish arrange yourself
 
To artfully break the four openings
 
To artfully break the four openings
Double above
+
Double high
Mutate right below
+
Mutate down below
 
I say to you truthfully
 
I say to you truthfully
 
No one defends themselves without danger
 
No one defends themselves without danger
 
If you have understood this,
 
If you have understood this,
They can barely come to strike, etc.
+
They can scarcely come to blows, etc.
 
 
This is for when the opponent cuts in earnestly. If you wish to then set yourself up against them to break and win the openings with artfulness so that they must allow themselves to be hit without their permission, then conduct the doubling against the strong of their sword and the mutating against the weak. For I say to you truthfully that they cannot protect themselves from strikes and therefore cannot come to blows.
 
 
 
Here note how you shall conduct the doubling on both sides.
 
 
 
When the opponent initiates a cut from above from their right shoulder, cut in from above with<ref>Vienna omits with</ref> them with<ref>Augsburg II omits with</ref> strength at their head with your right as well. If they parry and stays strong against their sword, then Indes, rise up with your arms and thrust your pommel under your right arm with your left hand and strike them with the long edge from crossed arms from behind their sword's blade with the short edge<ref>Augsburg II omits: with the short edge</ref> to their head.
 
  
Item. If you cut in from above from your left side with your long edge to their head, if they parry and remain strong in the sword, then immediately rise up with your arms and strike them from behind their sword's blade with the short edge upon their head.
+
Hurling
 +
Undertake hurling from the upper guard. Cut against the opponent to their left ear with your long edge. If they parry that, act as if you will suddenly withdraw and remain on their left ear with your short edge. Suddenly withdraw and hurl onto their right ear with the flat.
  
Note how you shall conduct the mutating from both sides
+
Break
 +
If the opponent starts to hurl at you, let the first strike detach and parry the second down from above with the long edge so that you can pin it down or suppress it.
  
Item. When you cut in strongly from above from your right shoulder to the opponent's head, if they parry and are soft against the sword, then wind your short edge against their sword to your left side and rise sufficiently up with your arms and hang your point over their sword from above and with that, drop back down with your arms<ref>Vienna omits: and with that, drop back down with your arms</ref> and thrust into their lower opening.
+
Shooting though
 +
You can also undertake shooting through from the high point. Cut down from above and with the short edge and inverted hand, down through the roses and into the opponent's face. Let it briefly run off and follow up with the long edge.
  
When you initiate a cut from your left side to the opponent's head<ref> Vienna: pommel</ref>, then if they parry and is soft against the sword, then rise up with your atms and keep your long edge against their sword and hang your point over their sword from above into their lower opening. You can conduct these two plays in this way from all cuts from the point after which you sense weakness or strength at the sword.
+
Break
 +
When the opponent shoots through, and will lay the short edge against you so that you cannot otherwise work, take your sword by the point and strike your cross against their head.
  
The crooked cut with the text of it's play
+
Iron Door
 
+
The third resting place is named the iron door or the cross according to the elders.
Crook up swiftly
 
Throw the point onto the hands
 
Crook. Whoever parries well
 
Disrupts many cuts with stepping.
 
 
 
Know that the crooked cut is one of the four parries against the four guards because with them one wars the ox and also the descending and the rising cut. Execute it like this. When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if they subsequently stand against you and hold their sword in front of their head in the guard of the ox on their left side, then advance your left foot and hold your sword in guard on your right shoulder spring with the right, well to your right side, and strike them across their hands with the long edge from crossed arms
 
 
 
Item. You also also conduct the crooked cut from the barrier guard from both sides. Send yourself into the guard like this. When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then advance your left foot and hold<ref>Augsburg II omits holding</ref> your sword upon the ground with the point next to your right side such that the long edge of the sword is turned and present yourself open like this with your left side. If they then cut in high into your opening, then spring away from the cut well to the right side, with your right foot facing them and strike them with crossed hands with the point of the long edge upon their hand.
 
 
 
Send yourself to your left side with the barrier guard like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, advance your right foot and hold your sword upon the ground with the point by your left side with crossed hands such that the short edge of the sword is up and present yourself open with your right side. Then if they strike at the opening, then spring to your left side with your left foot well away from the cut and strike them while springing over their hands with the short edge.
 
 
 
Text
 
 
 
Cut crooked to the flats
 
Of the masters if you wish to weaken them
 
When it clatters above
 
Then dismount, that I will praise
 
 
 
Gloss: Note you shall conduct this play against the masters from the bind of the sword. Execute it like this. When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, position your sword in the barrier guard to the right side or hold it on your right shoulder. Then if they cut at the opening from above, cut across theirs with your long edge from criss-crossed arms, 'Indes', cut to their head or to their body with your short edge.<ref>Vienna: entire stuck missing. Abridged from pPvD</ref>
 
 
 
The text from one of the plays of the crooked cut
 
 
 
Don't crook, short cut
 
With that, look for the disengage.
 
 
 
This is a break against the guard of the ox. Execute it like this: when you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if they subsequently stay in that guard and hold their sword in front of their head on their left side, then throw your sword at you right shoulder and act as if you want to bind against their sword via the crooked cut and cut short and during that disengaging below and shoot your point in long under their sword to the other side, so that they must parry. With this you come to blows and to other work with your sword.
 
 
 
Text
 
 
 
Crook whoever bewilders you
 
The noble war bewilders them
 
Such that they do not truthfully know
 
Where they are without danger.
 
 
 
Note whenever you conduct the crooked cut, you'll always make yourself open with it. Look at it like this, when you cut in or bind their sword with the crooked cut from your right side, you are open on the left side during this. If they are also crafty and will cut from the sword to your opening and bewilder you with agility, then keep your sword against theirs and track their sword from there onward and wind your point into their face and continue to work with the war, that is, with the windings to the openings so that they become so baffled that they truthfully will not know which regions they should shield themselves from your cuts and your thrusts.
 
 
 
Here begins the crosswise cut with it's plays
 
  
 
The cross seizes
 
The cross seizes
 
Whatever arrives from the roof
 
Whatever arrives from the roof
 
Gloss: Note the crosswise cut breaks the roof guard and any cut that is cut down from above. Execute the crosswise cut like this, when you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if they then stand facing you and hold their sword upwards with outstretched arms, high over their head in guard and threatens to cut in from above and come before yours,<ref>Augsburg II omits: "threatens to cut in from above and come before yours" and replaces it with: "and waits upon you" as per the Lew</ref> then advance your left foot and hold your sword with the flat on your right shoulder and  spring well to your right side with your right foot and wind your sword in front of your face by the hilt while springing such that your thumb goes underneath and strike them on the left side of their head with your short edge. But if they go forwards with their cut before you do, then spring away from the cut well to your right side with your right foot using the same afore written act of parrying such that you catch their cut in their hilt and then strike in with the crosswise cut in the afore named place.
 
 
 
Cross with the strong
 
Cross with the strong
 
Note your work with it.
 
Note your work with it.
 
This is: when you strike via the crosswise cut, you should strike with the entire strength of your body, because you constrain the opponent with strength and win their opening with it and understand it like this. When you initiate a strike or cut from the right side via the crosswise cut, if the opponent parries and binds strong against your sword with it, then either execute doubling or from your crosswise cut drive their sword away with your hilt and strike them on the other side of their head. When you initiate a cut via the crosswise cut and the opponent parries and binds soft against the sword, then execute mutating into their lower opening or drive your sword to the other side against their neck and spring behind their left foot with your right an drag them over it with your sword.
 
 
Gloss: This is When you initiate a cut via the crosswise cut, do it with strength. Then if they parry, rise up to the weak of their sword with the strong of your sword. If you then seize the weak of their sword, work over their sword to either the lower opening or high against their neck by mutating. But if they are too strong mit their act of parrying, then shove their sword away and strike on their other side via the crosswise cut. Or if they will rush in, then take the slice under their arms or await the wrestling.
 
 
 
Cross to the plow
 
Cross to the plow
 
Yoke hard to the ox
 
Yoke hard to the ox
 
Whoever crosses themselves well
 
Whoever crosses themselves well
Endangers the head with springing
+
Endangers the head by springing
 
+
The failer misleads
Note you have heard before that the ox and the plow are two guards or two positions, but here they designate the four openings. The ox: these are the two openings on the left and right side of the head. Similarly, the plow is also the left and right side of the lower half of someone's waist. You shall put all four openings to the test in one sortie with the cross strikes.
 
 
 
Here note the cross strikes to the four openings.
 
 
 
When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, advance your left foot and spring well to your right side with your right foot facing them and strike them with your complete power at the ox opening of their left side with a crosswise cut from above. If they then parry your strike, immediately strike down to the plow opening on their right side, further driving the cross strike swiftly over and over, one to the ox opening and the other to the plow, from one side to the other crosswise, to the head and to the body. You must always keep in mind that you shall always spring out to one side with each and every cross strike so that you can fully hit the opponent's head and also take care that you are well covered above all the while by your hilt.
 
 
 
This is the text of the play that here is called the failer
 
 
 
The failer misleads the believer
 
 
Wounding from below according to desire
 
Wounding from below according to desire
 
+
The inverter constrains
Note the failer is a play with which the fencers that like to parry and that strike at the sword and not to the openings of the body become confused and wounded according to desire.
 
 
 
Execute the failer like this
 
 
 
When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then make a rising cut from both sides. If you subsequently come against the opponent with the rising cut from your right side, then shoot your point long into their breast with it, so that they must parry. Then immediately spring to their right side with your left foot and act as if you will strike them on that side with the crosswise cut and abort the cut and strike immediately back around to the left side. Or if you come against them with your rising cut from the left side, then shoot in the point long and high and conduct the failer as before on the right side
 
 
 
This is the text of the play which here is called the inverter.
 
 
 
The inverter compels
 
 
Slipping through and also wrestles with it.
 
Slipping through and also wrestles with it.
 
Take the elbow surely
 
Take the elbow surely
 
Spring into their stance
 
Spring into their stance
 
Gloss The inverter. This is the half cut. You shall deliver it covertly with the initiation of fencing when you want to overwhelm the opponent so that you rush through him and hold them correctly with wrestling.
 
 
Execute the inverter like this
 
 
When you have gone halfway with the initiation of fencing, carry out the other half of the pass forward to the opponent over and over with the left foot and make a free rising cut to the right side after every advance in accordance with the left foot and with each the cut invert and turn the long edge of the sword upwards and as soon as you bind against their sword with that, Indes, hang your point in from above and stab them in the face. If they parry your thrust and rise up high with their arms, then rush through them. But if they stay low with their hands during the parry, then seize their right elbow with your left hand and spring in front of their right foot with your left and shove them over it like this. Or if you won't shove them over your foot, then pass your left arm back around their body and throw them over your hip.
 
 
Item. And how you shall rush through, you shall find that written hereafter in the part which says: "Rush through, let the pommel hang if you wish to grapple"
 
 
The text
 
 
 
Double the failer
 
Double the failer
If one hits then make the slice with [it]
+
If they make contact, make the slice with it
 
Double further
 
Double further
 
Stride in left and be not lax
 
Stride in left and be not lax
  
Note this is called the double failer. Conduct it like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then advance your left foot and hold your sword at your right<ref>Vienna: left</ref> shoulder and when it is right for you, spring well out to your right side with your left foot counter to them and act as if you will make a free crosswise cut to the left side of their head, abort the cut and spring all the way around to their right side with your left foot and strike them in the head with the cross strike. If they then parry and you hit their sword, then step on past close to them, on the same side and slice from behind their sword's edge into their mouth by doubling with the short edge or fall across their arms with your sword and slice. Execute this to both sides. You can also conduct the same way from a descending cut as you can from the cross strikes, if that is what you wish to do.
+
From the roof
 +
Position yourself in the iron door with braced hands. If the opponent strikes you from the roof, thake their strike from the roof with your short edge and step after them with the long edge.
  
You can also just as well execute the failer from descending cuts as you would from the cross strikes.
+
Break
 +
Conduct the failer against them. If they lie in the iron door, then they are driven out in vain and uncover themselves.
  
Here begins the text of the cockeyed cut with it's plays
+
Overshooting
 +
Position yourself as before with braced hands, step in with the short edge shot over to the opponent's left ear and make a follow up strike with the long edge.
  
The cockeyed cut breaks inside
+
Breaking
Whatever the buffalo cuts or thrusts
+
When the opponent overshoots the short edge, turn the strike away so that you come to strike against strike and the same work.
Whoever threatens to change,
 
The cockeyed cut robs them of it.
 
 
 
Gloss: Know that the cockeyed cut is a good<ref>Vienna omits</ref>, strange and grim<ref>Augsburg II: notable</ref> play, for it breaks in by cut and by thrust with violence and go in with an inverted sword. This is why many masters of the sword have nothing to say about this cut. And this cut also breaks the guard that is called here, the plow.
 
 
 
Item. Execute the cockeyed cut like this
 
 
 
The cockeyed cut is conducted like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then advance your left foot and hold your sword on your right shoulder. If they then cut at your head from above, then twist your sword and cut long from outstetched arms with your short edge against their cut up over their sword, into their face or breast. If they are then crafty in this way and halts the cut of their sword<ref>Augsburg II: aborts during the cut of your sword</ref> and chang through below, then let your point shoot forwards and remain with your point as before so that they can not come through from below.
 
 
 
Item. Another play
 
 
 
When you stand opposite the opponent and hold your sword on your right shoulder. If they then stand opposite you in the guard of the plow and will stab you from below, then initiate a cut long from above with the short edge by means of the cockeyed cut and shoot in your point into the breast of the opponent in such a way that they cannot reach you with their thrust.
 
 
 
The text of yet another play from the cockeyed cut
 
 
 
Cock an eye. If they short change you,
 
Disengaging defeats them.
 
 
 
When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, you shall cock an eye to see whether the opponent fences short against you. You shall recognize it when they initiate a cut, they do not extend their arms far from themselves, thus they are shortened. If you lie in the guard of the fool, then if the opponent will fall upon it with their sword, it is again shortened. If the opponent positions themselves against you in either the guard of the ox or of the plow, then they are again shortened. Also know that all winds before the opponent are short and withdraw the sword and freely disengage out of cuts and thrusts using long point against all that fence against you in this way, with this you constrain them so that they must parry or allow themselves to be struck.
 
 
 
This is the text of how you shall break long point with the cockeyed cut
 
 
 
Cock an eye at the point
 
Take the neck without fear
 
 
 
Note this is a play versus the long point using a deception of the face. Execute it like this<ref>Vienna: omits this line</ref> When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if they then stand and hold their point against your face or breast, hold your sword on your right shoulder and focus your eyes upon their point and act as if you wish to cut there and cut strongly against their sword with the short edge of the cockeyed cut and shoot the point long at their face with a step forwards of your right foot.
 
 
 
The text of yet another play of the cockeyed cut
 
 
 
Cock an eye at the top of the head
 
If you wish to ruin the hands
 
 
 
Item. When they stand opposing you in long point, then if you wish to strike them atop their hands, focus your eyes on their face or at their head and act as if you wish to strike them there and strike them on their hands from the cockeyed cut with your point.
 
 
 
The text of the part cut
 
 
 
The part cut
 
Is a threat to the face
 
With it's turn
 
The breast is yet endangered.
 
Whatever comes from them
 
The crown removes.
 
Slice through the crown
 
So that you break it beautifully and hard
 
Press the sweeps<ref>Vienna omits</ref>
 
By slicing withdraw it<ref>Vienna omits</ref>
 
 
 
Gloss: The part cut breaks the fool's guard and is quite threatening to the face and breast with it's turn. Execute the part cut like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if they position themselves against you in the fool's guard, advance your left foot and hold your sword high above your head with outstretched arms in the roof guard and spring into them and cut down from above strongly and keep your arms high and sinking your point downward into their face or breast. Then if they parry such that the point and the hilt both stand up on their sword (This is called the crown) and they rise up with it and shove your point upwards, then wind your sword down through their crown with your edge into their arm and press. In this way is the crown broken and drive your slice using pressing and withdraw yourself with it.
 
 
 
This is the text about the four positions or guards
 
 
 
Four positions alone
 
Defend from those and eshew the common
 
Ox, plow, fool,
 
From-the-roof are not dispised by you
 
 
 
Gloss: Note that you should fence from the four positions or the four guards. The first guard is called the ox. Put yourself there like this: stand with your left foot forwards and hold your sword by your right side such that your hilt stays in front of your head and your point stays against the opponent's face.
 
 
 
Item. Put yourself into the ox on the left side like this: Stand with your right foot forwards and hold your sword by your left side with your hilt in front of your head such that the long edge stays facing you and the point stays against the opponent's face. The ox on both sides.
 
 
 
The second is called the plow.
 
 
 
Put yourself there like this: advance your left foot and hold your sword at your hip, down by your right side, with crossed<ref>Munich I: inverted/twisted</ref> hands such that the short edge is up and your point is against the opponent's face.
 
 
 
Item on the left side.
 
 
 
The second is called the plow. Put yourself into the plow like this: Advance your left foot and hold your sword at your hip, down by your right side such that your short edge is up and your point is against the opponent's face.
 
 
 
Item. Put yourself into the plow on the left side like this: Advance your right foot and hold your sword at your hip, down by your left side such that your long edge is up and your point is against the opponent's face. This is the plow to both sides.
 
 
 
The third is called the fool. Put yourself there like this: Advance your right foot forwards and hold your sword in front of yourself with extended arms, with the tip of<ref>Vienna and Augsburg II omits</ref> your point upon the ground and such that the short edge is turned<ref>Vienna omits</ref> up.
 
 
 
This is the text about If the opponent is parrying you, as that is arriving
 
 
 
The fourth guard is called the roof guard. Put yourself there like this: Advance your left foot and hold your sword on your right shoulder or with your point<ref>Vienna and Augsburg II omits</ref> high over your head with extended arms and stand in the guard like this.
 
 
 
This is the text about the parries
 
  
 +
About parrying
 
Four are the parries
 
Four are the parries
 
That severly disrupt the positions
 
That severly disrupt the positions
 
Guard yourself from parrying
 
Guard yourself from parrying
 
If it happens by necessity, it hurts you
 
If it happens by necessity, it hurts you
 
+
If you are parried,
Gloss: You have heard previously about the four guards, you shall now know that there are four parries with which you shall break the four guards. Know that no actual parries are called for in this, because it is the four cuts that they break
+
Note as it happens.
 
 
The first is the crooked cut which breaks the guard of the ox
 
 
 
Item the second is the crosswise cut which breaks the roof guard
 
 
 
Item the third, this is the cockeyed cut, which breaks the guard of the plow
 
 
 
The fourth, this is the part cut, which breaks the guard here called the fool and how you shall break the four guards with the cuts, you shall find that written previously in the cuts. The consequence of this is to guard yourself so that you do not parry much, if you do not wish to otherwise become struck.
 
 
 
This is the text
 
 
 
If the opponent is parrying you,
 
Note as it arrives.
 
 
Heed what I advise:
 
Heed what I advise:
Break loose quickly, cut with threat.
+
Break loose quickly, cut with violence.
 
 
Note, this is for when the opponent has parried you and will not draw themselves away from your sword and fully intends to not let you come to any play. In this case act as if you will withdraw yourself, away from their sword and suddenly withdraw your sword to you, just to the midpart of your blade and together with that drive up with your sword and strike quickly at the opponent's head via doubling or with the short edge.
 
 
 
Item another one
 
 
 
When the opponent has parried you, wrench up against their sword with your sword up toward their point as if you would abscond above and remain against their sword and cut back in against their sword with your long edge.
 
 
 
This is the text of the four pins
 
 
 
 
Lodge against four regions
 
Lodge against four regions
 
Learn to remain upon them if you wish to finish
 
Learn to remain upon them if you wish to finish
  
Gloss: Lodging is an serious play because out of everything, it goes into the four openings the most narrowly and it is appropriate to execute where you wish to deliver an immediate end with your sword.
+
The second resting place is named the hanging point and is duel.
 +
Crook up swiftly
 +
Throw the point onto the hands
 +
Crook. Whoever parries well
 +
Disrupts many cuts with stepping.
 +
Cut crooked to the flats
 +
Of the masters if you wish to weaken them
 +
When it sparks above
 +
Then dismount, that I will praise
 +
Don't crook, short cut
 +
With that, look for the disengage.
 +
Crook whoever tricks you
 +
The noble war bewilders them
 +
Such that they do not truthfully know
 +
Where they are without danger.
  
[Vienna]
+
Hanging point
And lodging is executed like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then position yourself with your sword in either the guard of the ox or of the plow. Then if the opponent will from their right side either cut in from above or thrust in from below, note when they lift up their sword to strike or draws towards themselves below to thrust and shoot in ahead into long point into their left side opening before they can deploy their cut or thrust and see if can you lodge against them. Do the same when the opponent initiates a cut from below and this goes to both sides. Then if they become aware of your lodging and parries, then keep your sword against theirs and do not draw away from it and work quite swiftly with your sword to the nearest opening so they cannot come to any play.
+
The hanging point lands with the right foot forwards, like in the figure, with the flat below the face, entering short; and parry high  whatever strike that will be struck from the roof. Let it run off short and follow up with a strike long.
  
[others]
+
Break
Item. Execute the lodging like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, position yourself in the guard of the ox or of the plow with your sword. If the opponent will subsequently cut in from above or initiate a thrust from their right side, then come forwards with a act of parrying, shoot in the long point to the nearest opening of their left side, and see if you can lodge against them. But if they cut in from their left side, shoot in your point to the opening of their right side.
+
Drive the right foot forwards from the right side. If the opponent lies still in the hanging point, position the short edge on their right ear so they are not permitted to suddenly withdraw and wherever they do withdraw, they uncover themselves.
  
Item. When the opponent initiates a cut up from below from their right side, shoot in your point and lodge against them. Also do the same when they cut up from below from their left side. Then if they become aware of the lodge and parry, stay on their sword with yours and swiftly work to the nearest opening so they cannot come to any play.
+
Counter break
 +
Whenever the opponent positions the short edge against your neck, twist your hands with your sword and bar them from above with the long edge and grab their pommel with your left hand and throw them over their sword to the left side.
  
[Vienna]
+
Whichever one now lives on the ground,
Then if they withdraw themselves from your sword, execute the pursuing which will be explained to you hereafter.
+
They will be disgraced by no one.
  
This is the text about how you shall pursue
+
Four positions alone
 
+
Defend from those and eshew the common
Learn to pursue
+
Ox, plow, fool,
Double or slice into the weapon
+
From-the-roof are not dispised by you
Two couplings to the outside
 
The work begins thereafter
 
Inspecting the application
 
Whether they are soft or hard
 
 
 
Gloss. Note pursuing is diverse and varied and is required to be executed with great caution against the fencers that fight from free and lengthy cuts or will not otherwise keep to the proper art of the sword.
 
 
 
Execute the first play of pursuing like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, then advance your left foot and stand in roof guard, quite precisely observing what your opponent fences against you. Then if they cut in long from above from their right shoulder, do not parry them and see to it that they do not reach you with their cut. Then mark the moment during the cut that their sword goes down towards the ground, then spring into them with your right foot and cut in from above into the opening of their right side before they come back up with their sword, in this way they are struck
 
 
 
The is the coupling to the outside<ref>Wolfenbüttel: Broken gate to the outside</ref>
 
 
 
When the opponent misfires and you cut behind that, then if they immediately rise up with their sword and parry, then stay strong against their sword using your long edge. if they then lift up with their sword, then spring well behind their right foot with your left and strike them on the right side of their head with a crosswise cut or whatever and immediately work back around to their left side using duplieren or with whatever other plays dependent on you sensing whether they are soft or hard against the sword
 
 
 
Item. Yet another play.
 
 
 
When the opponent misfires and you cut behind that, then if you bind against the opponent's sword on their left side and then they immediately strike around from their act of parrying to your right side, then Indes, either advance ahead of them<ref>Vienna omits</ref> below their sword and toward<ref>Augsburg II omits</ref> their left side with a crosswise cut across their neck or spring to their right side with your left foot and according to their cut, either strike or cut behind that to their right side or conduct the slice across their arms into their head.
 
 
 
A good pursuing
 
 
 
When you fence against the opponent either from rising cuts or from the sweeps or you situate yourself against them in the fool's guard, then if they fall upon that with their sword before you come up, then stay against their sword like this with yours below and lift upwards. Then, if they will wind off you<ref>Augsburg and the others follow the lew: "either cut in from the act of parrying or wind in against your sword"</ref> , then do not let them come off your sword and pursue them thereon and work to the nearest opening during this.
 
 
 
Item. Note, you shall pursue the opponent from all guards and from all cuts as soon as you recognize that the opponent either cuts before you<ref>The others follow the lew: "either misfires or ..."</ref> or uncovers themselves in front of you with their cut.
 
 
 
This is the text about feeling and about the word Indes
 
 
 
Learn to feel it
 
Indes, this word cuts sharply
 
 
 
Gloss. Note that feeling and the word 'Indes' are the greatest and the best arts of the sword and whoever is or wishes to be a master of the sword yet cannot feel nor cannot marry the term 'Indes' to it, they are in fact not a master, rather they are a buffalo of the sword. Therefore you shall fully study the two things for all situations.
 
 
 
Note feeling like this:
 
  
Note when you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, one binding the other on the sword, you shall in this, as the swords clash together, you shall immediately feel in the clashing whether they have bound soft or hard and as soon as you have sensed this, then reflect on the Indes. This is about how you shall work swiftly at the sword within that perception before the opponent comes to their senses.
+
According to the old art, but according to our exquisite new art we have different names, but nonetheless is one idea. High point, Hanging point, Iron door, Plow. They are manifold.
  
Item. Note that feeling and the word Indes cannot occur without the other and understand it like this. When you bind against the opponent's sword, you can feel softness or hardness with the word Indes and when you have felt it, you must still work with Indes. In this way they are always with each other, because Indes is in all Plays. Understand that like this:  Indes disengages, Indes slips through. Indes takes the slice, Indes wrestles with. Indes takes the sword, Indes does what the heart desires. Indes is a sharp word, with it all masters of the sword that neither know nor understand this word are or will be carved up.
+
Overgripping
 +
You can also undertake overgripping from high point. Reach over your cross with your right hand into the blade such that your finger stands on the blade. If the opponent initiates a strike, strike against them with your strong such that you overwhelm their sword, keeping threat and suddenly withdraw your flat against their right ear and veer high into your act of parrying.
  
The text about overrunning[sic]<ref>The others omit this mistake</ref>
+
Break
 +
When the opponent overgrips, falsely offer them a strike and suddenly withdraw short, make a follow up strike long or else break it with a failer or a crown cut, etc.
  
Pursuing twice,
+
REMAINING
If one hits, make the old slice with it.
+
Position yourself in the high guard or high point, and cut to the opponent's left ear with your long edge, and act as if you will suddenly withdraw, but remain against their left ear with your short edge, thereafter suddenly withdraw and make a follow up cut with the long edge.
  
Gloss. Note this is about how you shall not forget to conduct the pursuing to both sides nor the slices therein. Look at it like this: When the opponent overcommits themselves attacking before you, be it from the right or from the left side, boldly cut into the opening and follow them closely. Then if they rise up and bind against your sword from below, then note as soon as one sword clashes onto the other and then 'Indes', continue with a slice towards their neck or fall upon their arms with your long edge, and immediately apply the slice to it.<ref>The others: "and take the slice"</ref>
+
Break
 +
When the opponent remains with their short edge against your right ear, remain on the other side as well. If they indeed pull away first, then they strike themselves the same way.
  
The text about overrunning
+
Splendid! I have already figured out myself how
 +
To displace to both places<ref>alt: points, ends</ref>
 +
I preserve the before, yet not too long.
 +
The openings will be wide open to me.
 +
No position will be good for you.
 +
I hit you in the after from a carefree spirit.
 +
With it, I come swiftly to work
 +
Just you wait until I bind you first.
  
 +
About overrunning
 
Whoever takes aim from below
 
Whoever takes aim from below
Overrun, then they will be shamed.
+
Overrun it, they will be shamed.
 
When it clashes above,
 
When it clashes above,
Strengthen, This I wish to praise.
+
Then dismount, This I will praise.
 
Make your work
 
Make your work
press<ref>Vienna: through, Wolfenbüttel: "press it"</ref> twice, soft or hard.
+
Or press hard twice.
 
 
Gloss. When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if they then initiate a cut from below, do not parry that. Rather, note when the rising cut moves towards you and cut in long from above from your right shoulder and shoot in your point into their face or breast long from above and pinn them from above so they cannot reach you below. Because all of the upper pins break and free you from the lower. Then if they rise up and bind against your sword from below, then stay strong on their sword with your long edge and work swiftly to the nearest opening or let them work and if you come Indes then you hit them.
 
  
Item. Note when you have strongly bound the opponent up against their sword, if they strike around you from the act of parrying to your other side, then bind them again strongly up against their sword with your long edge up into their head and work to the opening as before. This goes to both sides.
+
Triangle
 +
Position yourself with braced hands in front of your face. If the opponent strikes the buffalo from high point, twist your hands up from below and step into a false step and shield yourself short such that they roll down your flat, thereafter make a follow up strike long with a step
  
How you shall displace cut and thrust
+
Break
 +
When you have overcommitted yourself striking at your opponent, rise up with your pommel so you are also shielded. Let them roll down as well and work with them according to advantage.
  
 +
About Displacing
 
Learn to displace
 
Learn to displace
Skillfully disrupt cuts and thrusts
+
Skillfully disrupting cuts and thrusts
 
Whoever thrusts at you
 
Whoever thrusts at you
Your point hits and their's breaks
+
Their point breaks
 
From both sides
 
From both sides
 
You will hit every time, if you step.
 
You will hit every time, if you step.
  
Gloss. Note the displacing. Execute it like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, if they then set themselves against you as if they will thrust, advance your left foot and stand facing them in the guard of the plow on your right side and offer yourself open on your left side. Then, if they thrust into that opening, wind to your left side with your sword opposing their thrust, your short edge against their sword and displac it with that such that your point always faces your opponent and also stepping in with your right foot and stab them Indes in their face or the opening of their breast.<ref>The others omit "opening of"</ref>
+
Rushing through
 
+
Rush through, let hang
Item. Another play.
+
Grab with the pommel if you wish to grapple.
 
+
Whoever strengthens against you,
When you stand in the plow on your right side, if the opponent subsequently cuts into your opening on your left side from above, then drive up with your sword and with that wind your hilt in the ox on your left side in front of your head and against their cut and with that step toward the right foot and stab them in their face or breast. This play is also conducted from the plow from your left side in the same way as from your right.
+
Remember to rush through with it.
  
The text about disengaging.
+
Rule
 +
Remember whenever you initiate a thrust, that you always wind your sword under your right shoulder using the pommel when you hit with your point.
  
 +
About Disengaging
 
Learn to disengage
 
Learn to disengage
From both sides thrusting sharply with it
+
From both sides stabbing sharply with it
 
Whoever binds upon you
 
Whoever binds upon you
Disengaging surely finds them
+
Disengaging surely finds or slices the opponent
 +
 
 +
About suddenly withdrawing
 +
Tread close in binds,
 +
So that withdrawing suddenly gives good finds.
 +
Suddenly withdraw. If they engage, suddenly withdraw again.
 +
That does them harm.
 +
Suddenly withdraw all engagements
 +
If you wish to make a fool of the masters
  
Gloss. Note disengaging is many and varied. You shall conduct them against the fencers that like to parry and those that cut to the sword and not to the openings of the body. You shall learn quite well to conduct this with caution so that the opponent does not lodge against you nor otherwise come in while you disengage.
+
Combat Play
 +
Position yourself against the opponent as before. Grab the middle of your sword's blade with your left hand and thrust towards their face so that they must shield themselves and carry off your thrust. Follow them with a step and release your left hand from your sword. Reach across both of their hands with your pommel and position your edge against their neck and position them into the weak so that you throw them.
  
And you execute disengaging like this
+
Beak
 +
When the opponent has lodged their sword against you and and will throw you, release your right hand from your sword and shove their left elbow from below so that they must turn themselves.
  
When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, cut in long from above to their head. If they then counter cut against you at your sword and not to your body, then let your point rush through below during your cut, before they can bind on your sword and stab them on the other side. If they become aware of your thrust and immediately chase your thrust with their sword with an attempt to parry, then disengage above<ref>Others: again</ref> to the other side. And always execute this when the opponent moves towards your sword with an attempt to parry. The is executed on both sides.
+
Play
 +
If the opponent has lodged against your breast, take hold of their sword with your left hand forward by the point and thrust your sword behind their left leg and press against them with your breast and with your left hand against their breast, shove them back backwards over your sword.
  
Item, another.
+
About pursuing
 +
Learn to pursue
 +
Twice or slice into the weapon
 +
Two as well to the outside
 +
Your work begins thereafter
 +
And gauge the applications
 +
Whether they are soft or hard
 +
Learn to feel
 +
Indes, this here cuts sharply
 +
Pursuing twice,
 +
If on connects, make the old slice with it.
  
When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, advance your left foot and hold the long point against your opponent's face. Then if they strike at your sword either down from above or up from below and will bat it away or bind against it strongly, then let your point sink down and stab them on the other side. Execute this against all cuts where the opponent strikes at your sword and not to the openings of the body.
+
Plow
 +
The fourth resting place is named the plow. Whatever the buffalo strikes at you, step into the triangle with the right foot and shield yourself short with your flat such that they roll off. Thereafter follow them with your left foot and make a follow up strike with your long edge.
  
Item, quite precisely note this play
+
Break
 +
When the opponent parries you and have overcommitted yourself attacking, yank your pommel upwards so that you are well covered and let them roll off of it in the same way conceived in Hildebrand or Lightning cuts.
  
When the opponent parries you and allow their point to go off to your side, boldly disengage and stab them on the other side. Or, if they remain with their point in front of your face or toward your other openings of the body, then do not disengage. Remain on the sword and work with that to the nearest opening such that they cannot pursue, nor lodge against you.<ref>Vienna omits: "nor lodge against you"</ref>
+
About cutting off
 +
Cut off the hard ones
 +
From below in both paths
 +
Four are the slices
 +
Below two, above with it.
  
This is the text of how you shall suddenly withdraw
+
Play
 +
When you find the opponent in plow, overshoot them, be it with your short or long edge, before they come to their work. In this way, you bar them from neither yanking back nor striking. This will not fail you if you seize them in their resting position.
  
 +
About the cockeyed cut
 +
The cockeyed cut breaks inside
 +
Whatever the buffalo cuts or thrusts
 +
Whoever threatens to change,
 +
The cockeyed cut robs them of it.
 +
Cock an eye. If they short change you,
 +
Disengaging defeats them.
 +
Cock an eye at the point
 +
Take the neck without fear
 +
Cock an eye at the top of the head
 +
If you wish to ruin the hands
 +
 +
The short and long are my reservoir
 +
They safeguard me at all times
 +
Out of which, I drive all my work
 +
Strong to the blade, smooth to the body
 +
Therein I can perceive your strength
 +
I break yours from that moment on with weakness.
 +
Settle yourself down, pay attention right quick
 +
To what my master has taught me.
 +
 +
About withdrawing suddenly
 
Tread close in binds,
 
Tread close in binds,
So that yanking back gives good opportunities.
+
So that withdrawing suddenly gives good finds.
Suddenly withdraw. If they engage, suddenly withdraw more.
+
Suddenly withdraw. If they engage, suddenly withdraw again.
Uncover the work that does them harm.
+
Do work that does them harm.
Suddenly withdraw all engagements<ref>Augsburg II introduces scribal error. "Thut im we" became "thut ime be.."</ref>
+
Suddenly withdraw all engagements
 
If you wish to make a fool of the masters
 
If you wish to make a fool of the masters
  
Know that yanking back is appropriate to conduct against the masters that bind strongly against the sword by an act of parrying and against those that remain still at the sword and watch whether someone will either tie off<ref>bind you down</ref><ref>Augsburg omits</ref> or cut off or draw themselves off the sword. If you subsequently wish to deceive or make a fool of those masters, then conduct the yanking back against them like this: Cut in strongly from above at their head from your right side, if the opponent drives against that and will parry, then suddenly withdraw your sword toward yourself before they can bind against it, then stab them on the other side and do this in all engagements of the sword.
+
About binding up
 +
If the opponent binds you from above, gauge whether they lie hard or soft. If they lie hard, then wind down through the roses towards their face, onto their left ear, so that you wind out their sword and uncover them with it. But if they suddenly withdraw and strike, veer up into your act of parrying.
  
Item. Another yanking back.
+
Break
 +
If the opponent binds you from above, and lies firm such that they will not allow you to withdraw, lift your pommel upwards and let the point go in in between their hands and yank towards yourself so that they must let go.
  
When the opponent has bound against you against your sword, if they subsequently stand opposing you in the bind and watch whether or not you withdraw from the sword, then act as if you will suddenly withdraw and stay at the sword and suddenly withdraw your sword towards yourself just to the midpart of the blade and suddenly thrust back against their sword into their face or breast. If you do not rightly connect with your thrust, then work by doubling or otherwise with other plays, whatever seems best to you.
+
Wrenching out
 +
If the opponent binds you, and lies firm in the bind against your sword, reach over both of their hands with your hilt and wrench down towards yourself, with this you uncover them and strike.
  
This is the text about slipping through and about wrestling
+
Regarding the slice, trust me against your strong.
 +
Yet remember doubling.
 +
This window can occlude well.
 +
If you wish to please me, undertake your work.
  
 +
About the part cut
 +
The part cut Is a threat to the face
 +
With it's turn The breast is yet endangered.
 +
Whatever comes from them
 +
The crown removes.
 +
Slice through the crown
 +
So that you break it beautifully and hard
 +
Press the thrusts
 +
By slicing withdraw it
 +
 +
About rushing through
 
Rush through, let hang
 
Rush through, let hang
 
Grab with the pommel if you wish to grapple.
 
Grab with the pommel if you wish to grapple.
Whoever strengthens up against you,
+
Whoever strengthens against you,
Remember to rush through during that.
+
Remember to rush through with it.
  
Gloss. Slipping through and wrestling are appropriate to conduct against the masters that like to rush in and conduct it like this. When the opponent parries you and during that: rises up high with their arms, rushes in and tries to overwhelm you with strength from above, then rise up with your arms as well and hold your sword above your head with your left hand by the pommel and let your blade hang down back across your back and slip beneathe their arms to their right side with your head and spring behind their right foot with your right and during the spring move your right arm against the opponent's left side, well around their body and in this way, fasten them against your right hip and throw them backwards on their head in front of you.
+
About the speaking window
 +
Make the speaking window
 +
Stand freely, watch their situation.
 +
Strike them so that it snaps,
 +
Whoever withdraws themselves before you.
 +
I say to you truthfully
 +
No one defends themselves without danger
 +
If you have understood
 +
They cannot come to blows
  
Another wrestling
+
A play
 +
When the opponent lies before you in the speaking window, reach over their hilt and between their hands with your pommel and latch onto their hilt with your left thumb and pull toward yourself so that you uncover them and strike them with that.
  
Item. When the opponent rushes in on you with upstretched arms and you do the same, then rush through them with your head to their right side and let your sword hang back over your back as was written before and step ahead with your right foot in front of their right and drive through under their right arm back around their body with your right arm and fasten them to your right hip and throw them behind you. Conduct these two wrestlings to both sides.
+
Another
 +
When the opponent lies in the speaking window, position your self in exactly the same way. If they will not work shove them with your left hand on their right hand such that they turn themselves and uncovers them with it.
  
Item. Yet another wrestling
+
About hanging
 +
Two hangings emerge
 +
From the ground out of each place
 +
In every application
 +
Cut, Thrust, Position, Soft or Hard
  
Note when the opponent rushes in on you to your right side and is high with their arms and you are as well, hold your sword in your right hand with your pommel shored against and shov their arm and their sword away from you with your hilt and spring ahead with your left foot in front of both their feet and pass your left arm way back around their body and fasten them to your left hip and throw them in front of you on their face
+
About hand pressing
 +
Turn your slice
 +
To flatten, press your hands
  
Item. Yet another wrestling
+
A play
 +
When the opponent lies in the speaking window, position your self in the same way as well and reach over your sword with the fingers of your right hand and latch their sword to yours. With that you press their hands.
  
Note when the opponent rushes in on you and is high with their arms and you are as well, you shall hold your sword in your right hand and shov their arm away from you with that and spring behind their right foot with your left and pass your left arm down through in front of their breast to their left side and fasten them to your left hp and throw them behind you. Conduct these two wrestlings to both sides.
+
Sword disarm
 +
When you find the opponent in the speaking window or crosswise cut, reach over their right hand up from the outside with your left hand and position them into weakness with your left foot to the outside, across their right knee pit and draw them away from you so that they must let their sword drop.
  
Here note arm wrestling in the sword
+
A throw
 +
When the opponent rushes in at the sword and has bound high, move into their left breast with your right arm and position them in weakness with your right foot well behind their right knee pit and throw them down.
  
Whenever the opponent rushes in into your sword and holds their arms down, invert your left hand and seize their right with it from the inside, between both of their hands and with that drag them to your left side and strike them across their head with your sword with your right. But if you do not wish to strike, then spring behind their left foot with your right and pass your right arm around their neck, ahead or behind and throw them over your right knee in this way.
+
Another
 +
When the opponent rushes in, shove them on their right elbow with your left hand and step in front of their left foot with your right foot and let them plunge over it.
  
Item. Another.
+
Holding someone prone
 +
If you throw the opponent onto their belly, sit atop them and step over their arm so you are able to break it.
  
Whenever the opponent rushes in on you at the sword and is low with their hands, then release your left<ref>Vienna: right</ref> hand from your sword forwards and pass over their right hand with your pommel from the outside and press down with it and grab the opponent by their right elbow using your left hand and spring in front of their right foot with your left and pushing them over it.
+
Item. Two plays of the long sword. The first play is called:
 +
The inverter constrains
 +
Slipping through and also wrestles with it.
  
Item. Another wrestling.
+
The other play is called:
 
+
Rush through, let hang
When one rushes in on you at the sword, let your sword completely go and invert your right hand. And using that, take an outside grip of their right and with your left grasp them by their right elbow and spring in front of their right foot with your left and shove with your right hand
+
Grab with the pommel if you wish to grapple.
 
 
When the opponent rushes in on you at the sword, their right arm over your left and lift it upwards so that they are locked. In this way you can either break their arm or throw them over your left leg.<ref>Augsburg II: Keeps this with the previous play like in the Lew</ref>
 
 
 
Item. Yet another.
 
  
When the opponent rushes in on you at the sword, invert your right<ref>Augsburg II has left as in the Rome</ref> hand and pass over their left<ref>Augsburg II has right as in the Rome</ref> arm with it and seize their sword between both of their hands and drag them to your left side with that so that you take their sword from them.
+
Eight wrestlings come from these two plays
  
Item. Yet another.
+
Sword disarm
 +
Note. If the opponent lies high in the cross or the speaking window, release your back hand from your sword and reach between their hands with your pommel. Afterwards, retract your pommel with your hand inverted and wrench toward your left side so that you take their sword.
  
Note when the opponent parries you or otherwise bindsagainst your sword, seize both swords in the crossing of the blades with your left hand and hold them both firmly together and drive forwards, down through with your pommel and over both their hands and press them up to your right side with it, so that you keep both swords.
+
Another
 +
But if they lie low, reach over their haft with the pommel of your sword and take your pommel down into a clinch and wind towards your right side so that you either throw them over your sword or they must let the sword go.
  
Cut off the hard ones
+
A throw
From below with both applications
+
When the opponent engages high in their act of parrying and will not part, reach behind their right foot with your left foot and with your right arm into their left breast and throw them off their feet, over your left leg.
  
This is what you shall do when the opponent strongly binds atop your sword from above (or falls upon it). Look at it like this: When you initiate fencing from the rising cuts or from the sweeps or lay against your opponent in the guard of the fool, if they then fall upon that with their sword before your come up with yours, keep against their sword from below and lift upwards with your short edge. If they subsequently press your sword down firmly, then from their sword, sweep off backwards from beneathe with your sword against their sword's blade, away form their sword and immedately cut back in against their sword from above at their mouth<ref>"vnd haw im am swert" is repeated. Scribal error</ref>
+
Holding someone prone
 +
If you throw the opponent on their belly, drop your right knee onto their back and reach forward to the top of their head, grab their hair and pull up and crank their neck so they will fall back onto their belly if they try to stand.
  
Item. Another.
+
An upsweep play
 +
Item. When you lay in the side guard on your left side and someone makes a descending cut at you from their right shoulder, sweep up firmly up from below into their sword with your short edge. If the opponent stands strong and is not too high with the hands, double in between them and their sword with the short edge to their left ear.
  
When you initiate fencing with rising cuts or lay in the guard of the fool, if the opponent subsequently falls onto that close to your hilt, before you come up with it such that their point goes out toward your right side, then swiftly rise up over their sword with your pommel and strike them in the head with your long edge. Or if they bind atop your sword such that their point goes out to your left side, then rise up over their sword with your pommel and strike them in their head with your short edge. This is called snapping.
+
Another
 +
When you sweep up against the opponent's sword and they hold strong back, immediately strike their left side with the crosswise cut and again, double between [them and] their sword and strike at their right ear with the long edge.
  
The text about the four slices
+
Another
 +
When you sweep up against the opponent's sword and they are weak at the sword and with their hands low, cut toward their opening above with the long edge.
  
Four are the slices
+
Another
Two from below, two from above together.
+
When you sweep against the opponent's sword and they rise up high and wind, strengthen with the long edge, but if they strike with the crosswise cut, strike to their left side with a step off.
  
Item. Note the four slices. Firstly, the two from above are appropriate to conduct against the fencers that like to strike around to the other side from the act of parrying or from the bind of the sword. It breaks that with the slice like this: When the opponent binds against your sword on your left side with a parry or otherwise and immediately strikes back around to your right via a crosswise cut, spring to their right side with your left foot, away from their cut and fall across both their arms from above<ref>Augsburg II omits the rest of this passage</ref> with your long edge and press them away from you via the slice. You shall conduct this from both sides at anytime they strike or cut around from an act of parrying.
+
Another
 +
When you lie in the side guard or conduct the sweeps against the opponent, if they then hold their sword crosswise in front of themselves and will drop onto your sword and are high with their arms, sweep against their sword from below and thrust under their sword, into their breast.
  
The two lower slices are appropriate to conduct against the fencers that like to rush in with outstretched arms. Execute them like this: When they bind against your sword and rises up high with their arms and rush in on your left side, twist your sword such that your thumb comes under it and collapse into their arms with your long edge below their pommel and press them upwards with your slice.
+
Another
 +
If they are low with their hands and will rise up, then sweep through and thrust on the other side into their breast, whereupon it has disengaged.
  
Or if they rush in on you on your right side with outstretched arms, rotate your sword such that your thumb comes under it and collapse into their arms with your short edge below their pommel and press them upwards with your slice. These are the four slices.
+
Another
 +
When you sweep through, drop onto their sword with your long edge and wind toward your left side such that your thumb comes under and speed against the right side of the opponent's neck with your strong and spring with your right foot and back them over it.
  
The text about the transfromation of the slice
+
Another
 +
When you disengage out of sweeping and come up atop their sword on the other side you can just as well conduct the plays as before with stingers and with everything as before, on all sides.
  
Turn your slice
+
Fencing out of displacing
To escape, press your hands
+
When you fence with the opponent and come close to them, come into plow and conduct it swiftly by turning from one side to the other, such that your point always stays in front of yourself. From this you can conduct parrying. This is the narrows and in them you can strengthen with the long edge and from this conduct all the previous plays. You can also displace cut and thrust and break misaligned ones and seek the opening with your point.
  
This is about how you shall shift to the upper slice from the lower. Note it like this: When the opponent runs in with uplifted arms to your left side, then move your sword into their arms with your long edge under their pommel, pressing upwards firmly and during that step to their right side, winding your pommel through below as well and do not come away from their arms with your sword and turn your sword from the lower slice into the upper, over their arms with your long edge.
+
Side Guard
 +
When you fence with the opponent and come close to them, stand with the left foot forward and position your sword with the point upon the ground on your right side, such that the long edge is up. This goes on both sides.
  
Or if the opponent rushes in with uplifted arms to your right side, the turn your sword into their arms with your short edge underneath their hilt, pressing upwards firmly and step to their left side, letting your pommel go through below and turn your sword up over their arms with your long edge.
+
A play from side guard
 +
If the opponent initiates a cut from above or wherever it is, cut in crooked to their opening with a step out.
  
The text about the two lower hangings
+
Another
 +
Drive in the inverter with your point in their face. When they bindup, strengthen with the long edge and you can conduct all the plays that are previous in the sweeps.
  
Two ways of hanging emerge
+
Explanation of the advice
From the ground from one hand
+
When you fence with the opponent, extend your arms long, away from you and rest your thumb up atop your sword and turn your swor with your point away from you. With this you can drive up swiftly from below to your left side and move towards the opponent. From there, you can disengage to whichever side you wish or whatever play suits you, according to advantage.
In every clash
 
Cut, Thrust, Position, Soft or Hard
 
  
Gloss. Note that the two hangings from the ground, these are the plows to each side and when you fence or wish to fence from those, you shall also have the feeling of whether the opponent is soft or hard therein.
+
Breaking the crosswise cut
 +
When you stay in the roof guard and the opponent attacks you with a crosswise cut, simultaneously cut in the wrath cut and bind them strongly in the middle of their sword and if they will strike around with a crosswise cut, then crosswise cut ahead of them into their neck. You can also conduct all plays that are in the sweeps.
  
You shall conduct four winds from those and from each winding one cut, one thrust or one slice and outside of that conduct every application like from the two upper hangings, if you wish to otherwise fence correctly.
+
Another
 +
Note, when you execute a crosswise cut and the opponent will preempt you with a crosswise cut against your neck from below your sword, indes, drop atop their sword strongly with your long edge so that it is broken and take the next opening that becomes availble to you.
  
The text about the speaking window
+
About the wrath cut
 +
When you fence with the opponent and cut in with the wrath cut or however else down from above and they parry that and rise up with their arms and you both rush in on each other and they are then so circumspect that they will take your slice from below the hands into your arms, follow their sword downwards with your long edge and press down, thus you have broken them.
  
Make the speaking window
+
Another
Stand freely, watch their situation.
+
But when you arrive with your arms high and the opponent does as well and they rush in and want to bash you between the eyes or in the breast with their pommel through your arms from below your hands, speed downwards with your pommel, with your arms strong and heave towards yourself and strike them on their head with your sword.
Strike them so that it snaps
 
Whoever withdraws themselves before you.
 
I say to you truthfully
 
No one defends themselves without danger
 
If you have understood
 
They cannot come to blows
 
  
Gloss. Note you have heard before about how you should arrange yourself with your sword in the four guards and how you should fence from them. You should now know about the speaking window, which is also a guard that you can stand fully secure in. And this guard is the long point which is the noblest and the best guard of the sword. they constrain their opponent with it in such a way that the opponent must allow themselves to be struck without their consent and furthermore cannot come to strikes or anything before your point.
+
Combat play
 +
Stab the opponent in the face on the inside and slip down through and stab them in the face on the outside. But if they defend that, step between both of their legs with your left foot and reach out over their left leg with your pommel into the pit of their knee and lift up with your pommel and with your left shoulder push them away from you from up high so that they fall.
  
Make the speaking window like this
+
Break
 +
When your opponent speeds into the pit of your left knee with their pommel, reach up from below and grab onto their elbow behind their left hand with your right hand and take their weight.
  
When you have almost arrived at the opponent with the initiation of fencing, advance your left foot and hold your point long from your arms and against their face or breast before you bind on their sword and stand freely and watch what they will fence against you. If they will subsequently cut long and deep at your head, then rise up and wind into the ox with your sword against their cut and stab them in their face. But if they will cut at your sword and not to your body, then disengage and stab them on the other side. If the opponent rushes in and is high with their arms, then conduct the lower slice or rush through with wrestling. If they are low with their arms, then seek the arm wrestling. You can deliver all plays from the long point like this.
+
Combat play
 +
Stab the opponent in the face on the inside and lodge against them. If they defend that, withdraw suddenly and stab them on the other side. But if they defend that and sweep your point aside, slip over their right shoulder and around their neck with your pommel and spring behind their left foot with your right and throw them over it.
  
Another of the long point's
+
Break
 +
When the opponent has slipped over your right shoulder and around your neck with their pommel, seize their right elbow with your left hand and shove them away from you so that you gain their side.
  
Whenever you move toward your opponent with the initiation of fencing, with whichever cut you approach them, be it a rising or descending cut, always let your point shoot in long to their face or to their breast during your cut. With that you constrain them such that they must parry or bind on the sword. And when they have bound on, remain strong with your long edge on their sword and stand freely and watch their situation and whatever they will fence against you. If they draw themselves back off from your sword then follow after them with your point to their breast. Or if they strike around to the other side leaving your sword, then bind in behind their cut strongly from above into their head. Or if they neither withdraw from your sword nor strike around, then work by doubling or otherwise using other plays as you subsequently sense weakness or strength in the sword.
+
Another break
 +
When the opponent has slipped around your neck with their pommel, seize their right arm with your left hand and hold it firmly and turn yourself away from them to your right side and throw them over your left hip.
  
This is the text of the Instruction of the four hangers and the eight hangings
+
The distillation of the long sword
  
 
Who fully commands and correctly breaks
 
Who fully commands and correctly breaks
 
And makes complete irrefutable judgement
 
And makes complete irrefutable judgement
 
And breaks each one individually
 
And breaks each one individually
Into three wounders,
+
Into three wounders
 
Who hangs consumately and correctly
 
Who hangs consumately and correctly
And delivers the winding with it
+
And carries out windings correctly with it
 
And considers the eight winds
 
And considers the eight winds
 
With correct judgement
 
With correct judgement
And to them make singular,
+
And unites them.
The winds, I differentiate trebly
+
The windings, I differentiate trebly
 
Thus they are twenty
 
Thus they are twenty
 
And four counting them individually.
 
And four counting them individually.
 
From both sides
 
From both sides
Learn eight winds with steps
+
Learn eight windings with steps
And inspect these applications
+
Gauge these applications
Nothing more than soft or hard
+
As soft or hard
 
 
Note this is a lesson and an exhortation of hanging and winding. You have to be well practiced and accomplished in this so that you can both swiftly take lead and correctly conduct a break against one of another fencer's plays from them. The hangers are four, to which belong two from below and two from above. These are the ox and the plow. From these you shall deliver eight winds. And you shall further consider and correctly judge these eight winds in such a way that you shall conduct from each wind one of the three wounders, that is: a cut, a thrust or a slice.
 
 
 
Note here how you shall execute four winds from the upper two hangers (that is, from the ox), two from the right and two from the left. Execute them like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, setup in ox from from your right side, then if they cut in from above to your left side, wind your short edge into their sword against their cut into the ox and thrust in from above into their face. This is one winding. Then, if they parry you thrust, remain at the sword and wind your short edge against their sword back up into the ox on your right side and thrust in from above into their face. There are two windings against the sword from the upper hangers from the right side.
 
 
 
Item The second upper hangers execute like this: When you come to the opponent with the initiation of fencing, setup in ox from your left side. Then if they cut in from above to your right side, wind your long edge against their cut onto their sword and thrust in from above into their face. This is one winding. If they displace your thrust, then remain against their sword and wind your long edge against their sword back to your left side into the ox and [thrust] in from above into their face in the ox. These are the four windings from the upper two hangers.
 
 
 
Item. Now you shall know that you shall execute the four winds from the plow from both sides (these are the two lower hangers) with all of their techniques just like the upper hangers. In this way the winds become eight and note that whenever you wind, you think about the cut and about the thrust and about the slice in each individual wind. In this way you come to twenty four from the eight winds. And how you shall execute cut, thrust and slice, you will find all of that written in the plays. You should also learn to expertly execute the eight winds with stepping on both sides. And note as soon as you wind, you shall analyze each particular winden with nothing more than whether the two applications are soft or hard against your sword. Thereafter execute the play that subsequently becomes clear to you in the previous statement
 
  
Item. Here ends the text from the recital of the long sword of how one shall hold themselves in the sword: every step and measure, and cut and thrust and slamm together strike and any opening and when one is soft, then you are strong and when one is strong, then you are soft, thus you find weak and strong with each other well in the guard.
+
Do not focus on more than you understand
 +
So that you do not end up behind the wagon
  
Item. It is to be known that the "neche"<ref>unclear: could be a small boat, or the area around something. I think this is referencing the wind and counter wind. See Ringeck for additional context</ref>. and the two hangings and the sliding and the hollow parrying, and the golden Art breaks the Art. These five plays, they break the recital. Also if someone finds their opponent well, they break them using one or two plays, because one cut breaks the other and one play breaks the other and one thrust breaks the other. Note the gloss.
+
Except of the short sword

Revision as of 15:10, 26 June 2021

An examination of the Knightly Art of Fighting by Andre Paurnfeindt, Freifechter of Vienna, Austria, towards a clear comprehension and concise understanding thereof.

To the Sublime Magnificent Prince and Lord, Sir Matthäus of the Holy Roman See, Cardinal of St. Angelo, Papal Legate, Bishop of Gurk, Coadjuctor of the Diocese of Salzburg etc; Andre Paurnfeindt, Freifechter and his Magnificence the Cardinal's loyal bodyguard, offers his humble service.

O' Sublime in God the Father, Magnificent Prince and Merciful Lord; after a great deterioration and lack of attention became apparent to me, for this reason, in the name of impressionable youth amid daily practice, I have decided to concisely record the Knightly Art of Fighting and thoroughly explain the Zettel in order to avoid gambling, debauchery, bad company, etc. Such an explanation I wish to accredit and dedicate to your Princely Grace. With this, I prostrate myself before your Magnificence in all humility.

In short, I have formulated three chapters in which the Lore and Essence of Fighting is concisely summarized, not for the elder fencers, but for the young students, so that enjoyment and practice grows daily in them. From all of this I have briefly proposed twelve rules from which expertise, subtlety and agility can develop in you. In this way, you learn from a master of the sword or from a sworn Freifechter and not from misbegotten fencers, like when one blind man leads the other and both fall into a ditch.

If leaf and grass grew As fast as envy and hate Then sheep and cattle would have A good winter this year.

Do not let yourself scoff at these twelve rules, From them great art may sprout from you.

The First

Whichever leg[1] stands forward, bend it. The hind one supports the body above outstretched.

The Second

Fence upright with a straight body. Drive a powerful posture from that length.

The Third

Strike and step with one another. But set your feet against one another.

The Fourth

Those who chase after cuts Are not allowed to enjoy art.

The Fifth

Note what the flat is. Do not fence left if you are right.

The Sixth

Seek weak and strong Indes, note this word precisely.

The Seventh

Recognize soft or hard. Pursuing is your companion. [2]

The Eighth

Strike before and after. Do not be hasty to rush in.

The Ninth

Fence at the body from close. Do not omit the stingers.[3]

The Tenth

Step close in the bind. Otherwise you will be wounded.

The Eleventh

[That which is] in front of the hand is called the long edge. Seldom guide an act of parrying to the short.

The Twelfth

If you frighten easily, Do not learn to fence.

The first chapter teaches how one should employ expertise in the long sword, whichever is used with both hands, such as the battle sword, riding sword, estoc, and many others which I will for brevity's sake leave out.

A Zettel fencer I proclaim myself, Indomitable in Sword and Messer. In strength, weakness, short and long, I do violence to my opponent. Indes, pay attention! Understand me correctly. Hit them before they strike their position

Then I have another one on top of that. With this, my art sells quite expensively. Now I conduct my work unhindered, Right in smoothly to the body, toward the blade To make slice, strike, thrust; then right back out. If you wish to learn thoroughly, come to me.

The first resting place is named High Point or Ox as the elders will and it will be assumed hereon.

Whoever makes a descending cut at you The point of wrathcut threatens them If they become aware of it Then abscond above without concern Be strong in turn Wind. Stab. If they see it, then take it below Precisely note this. Cut, thrust, position, soft or hard Indes and before and after Without collision your war is not to be hasty Whoever hunts the war Above, will be exposed below. In all windings Cut, thrust, slice learn to apply Also with that you shall Gauge cut, thrust or slice In all encounters Of the masters, if you wish to weaken them.

The wing cut Undertake the wing cut from the upper guard or high point. The first strike to the left ear from the roof, the second from below with a step to your left side, the third strike to the head from behind.

Break If the opponent initiates a wing cut, parry the first from the roof. The second, pin down with the long edge from below and grab their sword's pommel with your left hand, then you throw them over their sword.

Wrathcut Crook and Cross, If the Eye Cocker keeps with the Parter, The Fool parries. Pursuing, Overrunning, places the attack Disengage, Suddenly withdraw, Rush through, cut off, press the hands Tilt and Turn to uncover with Slash, catch, sweep, thrust to clash with

Crown cut Step and strike through to the opponent's ear from above with the long edge. The second step and strike down from above to the right ear with the short edge. The third, strike from behind with the long edge.

Break When the opponent executes a crown cut, catch the first. For the second, situate your short edge against their neck so that they injure themselves themself.

Failer Undertake the failer from the high point. Cut short to the opponent's left ear explosively and step towards their right side with your left foot. And hammer in the second strike long to the right ear. Keep high with good

Break Cut from above from the ox against the opponent, down through the roses and land your short edge in their face. Veer off short and make a followup strike with the long edge.

About the 4 openings Know the four openings Take aim so that you strike quite wisely Without any fear Without doubt however they are situated

Breaking the four openings If you wish arrange yourself To artfully break the four openings Double high Mutate down below I say to you truthfully No one defends themselves without danger If you have understood this, They can scarcely come to blows, etc.

Hurling Undertake hurling from the upper guard. Cut against the opponent to their left ear with your long edge. If they parry that, act as if you will suddenly withdraw and remain on their left ear with your short edge. Suddenly withdraw and hurl onto their right ear with the flat.

Break If the opponent starts to hurl at you, let the first strike detach and parry the second down from above with the long edge so that you can pin it down or suppress it.

Shooting though You can also undertake shooting through from the high point. Cut down from above and with the short edge and inverted hand, down through the roses and into the opponent's face. Let it briefly run off and follow up with the long edge.

Break When the opponent shoots through, and will lay the short edge against you so that you cannot otherwise work, take your sword by the point and strike your cross against their head.

Iron Door The third resting place is named the iron door or the cross according to the elders.

The cross seizes Whatever arrives from the roof Cross with the strong Note your work with it. Cross to the plow Yoke hard to the ox Whoever crosses themselves well Endangers the head by springing The failer misleads Wounding from below according to desire The inverter constrains Slipping through and also wrestles with it. Take the elbow surely Spring into their stance Double the failer If they make contact, make the slice with it Double further Stride in left and be not lax

From the roof Position yourself in the iron door with braced hands. If the opponent strikes you from the roof, thake their strike from the roof with your short edge and step after them with the long edge.

Break Conduct the failer against them. If they lie in the iron door, then they are driven out in vain and uncover themselves.

Overshooting Position yourself as before with braced hands, step in with the short edge shot over to the opponent's left ear and make a follow up strike with the long edge.

Breaking When the opponent overshoots the short edge, turn the strike away so that you come to strike against strike and the same work.

About parrying Four are the parries That severly disrupt the positions Guard yourself from parrying If it happens by necessity, it hurts you If you are parried, Note as it happens. Heed what I advise: Break loose quickly, cut with violence. Lodge against four regions Learn to remain upon them if you wish to finish

The second resting place is named the hanging point and is duel. Crook up swiftly Throw the point onto the hands Crook. Whoever parries well Disrupts many cuts with stepping. Cut crooked to the flats Of the masters if you wish to weaken them When it sparks above Then dismount, that I will praise Don't crook, short cut With that, look for the disengage. Crook whoever tricks you The noble war bewilders them Such that they do not truthfully know Where they are without danger.

Hanging point The hanging point lands with the right foot forwards, like in the figure, with the flat below the face, entering short; and parry high whatever strike that will be struck from the roof. Let it run off short and follow up with a strike long.

Break Drive the right foot forwards from the right side. If the opponent lies still in the hanging point, position the short edge on their right ear so they are not permitted to suddenly withdraw and wherever they do withdraw, they uncover themselves.

Counter break Whenever the opponent positions the short edge against your neck, twist your hands with your sword and bar them from above with the long edge and grab their pommel with your left hand and throw them over their sword to the left side.

Whichever one now lives on the ground, They will be disgraced by no one.

Four positions alone Defend from those and eshew the common Ox, plow, fool, From-the-roof are not dispised by you

According to the old art, but according to our exquisite new art we have different names, but nonetheless is one idea. High point, Hanging point, Iron door, Plow. They are manifold.

Overgripping You can also undertake overgripping from high point. Reach over your cross with your right hand into the blade such that your finger stands on the blade. If the opponent initiates a strike, strike against them with your strong such that you overwhelm their sword, keeping threat and suddenly withdraw your flat against their right ear and veer high into your act of parrying.

Break When the opponent overgrips, falsely offer them a strike and suddenly withdraw short, make a follow up strike long or else break it with a failer or a crown cut, etc.

REMAINING Position yourself in the high guard or high point, and cut to the opponent's left ear with your long edge, and act as if you will suddenly withdraw, but remain against their left ear with your short edge, thereafter suddenly withdraw and make a follow up cut with the long edge.

Break When the opponent remains with their short edge against your right ear, remain on the other side as well. If they indeed pull away first, then they strike themselves the same way.

Splendid! I have already figured out myself how To displace to both places[4] I preserve the before, yet not too long. The openings will be wide open to me. No position will be good for you. I hit you in the after from a carefree spirit. With it, I come swiftly to work Just you wait until I bind you first.

About overrunning Whoever takes aim from below Overrun it, they will be shamed. When it clashes above, Then dismount, This I will praise. Make your work Or press hard twice.

Triangle Position yourself with braced hands in front of your face. If the opponent strikes the buffalo from high point, twist your hands up from below and step into a false step and shield yourself short such that they roll down your flat, thereafter make a follow up strike long with a step

Break When you have overcommitted yourself striking at your opponent, rise up with your pommel so you are also shielded. Let them roll down as well and work with them according to advantage.

About Displacing Learn to displace Skillfully disrupting cuts and thrusts Whoever thrusts at you Their point breaks From both sides You will hit every time, if you step.

Rushing through Rush through, let hang Grab with the pommel if you wish to grapple. Whoever strengthens against you, Remember to rush through with it.

Rule Remember whenever you initiate a thrust, that you always wind your sword under your right shoulder using the pommel when you hit with your point.

About Disengaging Learn to disengage From both sides stabbing sharply with it Whoever binds upon you Disengaging surely finds or slices the opponent

About suddenly withdrawing Tread close in binds, So that withdrawing suddenly gives good finds. Suddenly withdraw. If they engage, suddenly withdraw again. That does them harm. Suddenly withdraw all engagements If you wish to make a fool of the masters

Combat Play Position yourself against the opponent as before. Grab the middle of your sword's blade with your left hand and thrust towards their face so that they must shield themselves and carry off your thrust. Follow them with a step and release your left hand from your sword. Reach across both of their hands with your pommel and position your edge against their neck and position them into the weak so that you throw them.

Beak When the opponent has lodged their sword against you and and will throw you, release your right hand from your sword and shove their left elbow from below so that they must turn themselves.

Play If the opponent has lodged against your breast, take hold of their sword with your left hand forward by the point and thrust your sword behind their left leg and press against them with your breast and with your left hand against their breast, shove them back backwards over your sword.

About pursuing Learn to pursue Twice or slice into the weapon Two as well to the outside Your work begins thereafter And gauge the applications Whether they are soft or hard Learn to feel Indes, this here cuts sharply Pursuing twice, If on connects, make the old slice with it.

Plow The fourth resting place is named the plow. Whatever the buffalo strikes at you, step into the triangle with the right foot and shield yourself short with your flat such that they roll off. Thereafter follow them with your left foot and make a follow up strike with your long edge.

Break When the opponent parries you and have overcommitted yourself attacking, yank your pommel upwards so that you are well covered and let them roll off of it in the same way conceived in Hildebrand or Lightning cuts.

About cutting off Cut off the hard ones From below in both paths Four are the slices Below two, above with it.

Play When you find the opponent in plow, overshoot them, be it with your short or long edge, before they come to their work. In this way, you bar them from neither yanking back nor striking. This will not fail you if you seize them in their resting position.

About the cockeyed cut The cockeyed cut breaks inside Whatever the buffalo cuts or thrusts Whoever threatens to change, The cockeyed cut robs them of it. Cock an eye. If they short change you, Disengaging defeats them. Cock an eye at the point Take the neck without fear Cock an eye at the top of the head If you wish to ruin the hands

The short and long are my reservoir They safeguard me at all times Out of which, I drive all my work Strong to the blade, smooth to the body Therein I can perceive your strength I break yours from that moment on with weakness. Settle yourself down, pay attention right quick To what my master has taught me.

About withdrawing suddenly Tread close in binds, So that withdrawing suddenly gives good finds. Suddenly withdraw. If they engage, suddenly withdraw again. Do work that does them harm. Suddenly withdraw all engagements If you wish to make a fool of the masters

About binding up If the opponent binds you from above, gauge whether they lie hard or soft. If they lie hard, then wind down through the roses towards their face, onto their left ear, so that you wind out their sword and uncover them with it. But if they suddenly withdraw and strike, veer up into your act of parrying.

Break If the opponent binds you from above, and lies firm such that they will not allow you to withdraw, lift your pommel upwards and let the point go in in between their hands and yank towards yourself so that they must let go.

Wrenching out If the opponent binds you, and lies firm in the bind against your sword, reach over both of their hands with your hilt and wrench down towards yourself, with this you uncover them and strike.

Regarding the slice, trust me against your strong. Yet remember doubling. This window can occlude well. If you wish to please me, undertake your work.

About the part cut The part cut Is a threat to the face With it's turn The breast is yet endangered. Whatever comes from them The crown removes. Slice through the crown So that you break it beautifully and hard Press the thrusts By slicing withdraw it

About rushing through Rush through, let hang Grab with the pommel if you wish to grapple. Whoever strengthens against you, Remember to rush through with it.

About the speaking window Make the speaking window Stand freely, watch their situation. Strike them so that it snaps, Whoever withdraws themselves before you. I say to you truthfully No one defends themselves without danger If you have understood They cannot come to blows

A play When the opponent lies before you in the speaking window, reach over their hilt and between their hands with your pommel and latch onto their hilt with your left thumb and pull toward yourself so that you uncover them and strike them with that.

Another When the opponent lies in the speaking window, position your self in exactly the same way. If they will not work shove them with your left hand on their right hand such that they turn themselves and uncovers them with it.

About hanging Two hangings emerge From the ground out of each place In every application Cut, Thrust, Position, Soft or Hard

About hand pressing Turn your slice To flatten, press your hands

A play When the opponent lies in the speaking window, position your self in the same way as well and reach over your sword with the fingers of your right hand and latch their sword to yours. With that you press their hands.

Sword disarm When you find the opponent in the speaking window or crosswise cut, reach over their right hand up from the outside with your left hand and position them into weakness with your left foot to the outside, across their right knee pit and draw them away from you so that they must let their sword drop.

A throw When the opponent rushes in at the sword and has bound high, move into their left breast with your right arm and position them in weakness with your right foot well behind their right knee pit and throw them down.

Another When the opponent rushes in, shove them on their right elbow with your left hand and step in front of their left foot with your right foot and let them plunge over it.

Holding someone prone If you throw the opponent onto their belly, sit atop them and step over their arm so you are able to break it.

Item. Two plays of the long sword. The first play is called: The inverter constrains Slipping through and also wrestles with it.

The other play is called: Rush through, let hang Grab with the pommel if you wish to grapple.

Eight wrestlings come from these two plays

Sword disarm Note. If the opponent lies high in the cross or the speaking window, release your back hand from your sword and reach between their hands with your pommel. Afterwards, retract your pommel with your hand inverted and wrench toward your left side so that you take their sword.

Another But if they lie low, reach over their haft with the pommel of your sword and take your pommel down into a clinch and wind towards your right side so that you either throw them over your sword or they must let the sword go.

A throw When the opponent engages high in their act of parrying and will not part, reach behind their right foot with your left foot and with your right arm into their left breast and throw them off their feet, over your left leg.

Holding someone prone If you throw the opponent on their belly, drop your right knee onto their back and reach forward to the top of their head, grab their hair and pull up and crank their neck so they will fall back onto their belly if they try to stand.

An upsweep play Item. When you lay in the side guard on your left side and someone makes a descending cut at you from their right shoulder, sweep up firmly up from below into their sword with your short edge. If the opponent stands strong and is not too high with the hands, double in between them and their sword with the short edge to their left ear.

Another When you sweep up against the opponent's sword and they hold strong back, immediately strike their left side with the crosswise cut and again, double between [them and] their sword and strike at their right ear with the long edge.

Another When you sweep up against the opponent's sword and they are weak at the sword and with their hands low, cut toward their opening above with the long edge.

Another When you sweep against the opponent's sword and they rise up high and wind, strengthen with the long edge, but if they strike with the crosswise cut, strike to their left side with a step off.

Another When you lie in the side guard or conduct the sweeps against the opponent, if they then hold their sword crosswise in front of themselves and will drop onto your sword and are high with their arms, sweep against their sword from below and thrust under their sword, into their breast.

Another If they are low with their hands and will rise up, then sweep through and thrust on the other side into their breast, whereupon it has disengaged.

Another When you sweep through, drop onto their sword with your long edge and wind toward your left side such that your thumb comes under and speed against the right side of the opponent's neck with your strong and spring with your right foot and back them over it.

Another When you disengage out of sweeping and come up atop their sword on the other side you can just as well conduct the plays as before with stingers and with everything as before, on all sides.

Fencing out of displacing When you fence with the opponent and come close to them, come into plow and conduct it swiftly by turning from one side to the other, such that your point always stays in front of yourself. From this you can conduct parrying. This is the narrows and in them you can strengthen with the long edge and from this conduct all the previous plays. You can also displace cut and thrust and break misaligned ones and seek the opening with your point.

Side Guard When you fence with the opponent and come close to them, stand with the left foot forward and position your sword with the point upon the ground on your right side, such that the long edge is up. This goes on both sides.

A play from side guard If the opponent initiates a cut from above or wherever it is, cut in crooked to their opening with a step out.

Another Drive in the inverter with your point in their face. When they bindup, strengthen with the long edge and you can conduct all the plays that are previous in the sweeps.

Explanation of the advice When you fence with the opponent, extend your arms long, away from you and rest your thumb up atop your sword and turn your swor with your point away from you. With this you can drive up swiftly from below to your left side and move towards the opponent. From there, you can disengage to whichever side you wish or whatever play suits you, according to advantage.

Breaking the crosswise cut When you stay in the roof guard and the opponent attacks you with a crosswise cut, simultaneously cut in the wrath cut and bind them strongly in the middle of their sword and if they will strike around with a crosswise cut, then crosswise cut ahead of them into their neck. You can also conduct all plays that are in the sweeps.

Another Note, when you execute a crosswise cut and the opponent will preempt you with a crosswise cut against your neck from below your sword, indes, drop atop their sword strongly with your long edge so that it is broken and take the next opening that becomes availble to you.

About the wrath cut When you fence with the opponent and cut in with the wrath cut or however else down from above and they parry that and rise up with their arms and you both rush in on each other and they are then so circumspect that they will take your slice from below the hands into your arms, follow their sword downwards with your long edge and press down, thus you have broken them.

Another But when you arrive with your arms high and the opponent does as well and they rush in and want to bash you between the eyes or in the breast with their pommel through your arms from below your hands, speed downwards with your pommel, with your arms strong and heave towards yourself and strike them on their head with your sword.

Combat play Stab the opponent in the face on the inside and slip down through and stab them in the face on the outside. But if they defend that, step between both of their legs with your left foot and reach out over their left leg with your pommel into the pit of their knee and lift up with your pommel and with your left shoulder push them away from you from up high so that they fall.

Break When your opponent speeds into the pit of your left knee with their pommel, reach up from below and grab onto their elbow behind their left hand with your right hand and take their weight.

Combat play Stab the opponent in the face on the inside and lodge against them. If they defend that, withdraw suddenly and stab them on the other side. But if they defend that and sweep your point aside, slip over their right shoulder and around their neck with your pommel and spring behind their left foot with your right and throw them over it.

Break When the opponent has slipped over your right shoulder and around your neck with their pommel, seize their right elbow with your left hand and shove them away from you so that you gain their side.

Another break When the opponent has slipped around your neck with their pommel, seize their right arm with your left hand and hold it firmly and turn yourself away from them to your right side and throw them over your left hip.

The distillation of the long sword

Who fully commands and correctly breaks And makes complete irrefutable judgement And breaks each one individually Into three wounders Who hangs consumately and correctly And carries out windings correctly with it And considers the eight winds With correct judgement And unites them. The windings, I differentiate trebly Thus they are twenty And four counting them individually. From both sides Learn eight windings with steps Gauge these applications As soft or hard

Do not focus on more than you understand So that you do not end up behind the wagon

Except of the short sword

  1. lit: foot
  2. alt: vehicle, path, application
  3. alt: flesh wounds, tag hits.
  4. alt: points, ends